Style can refer to brim shape and/or crown creases.
A quality hat manufacturer will help advise you on which
styles to select based on where you plan to wear the hat and
your face shape.
Brim Shapes
Western A traditional brim shape with a low roll that provides good
protection from the sun. This style is very popular.
Bull Rider A flat brim with the very outer edges rolled up, framing the face.
The front of the brim is flat, making a corner where the roll
begins. This style is also popular.
Reiner Low Sides A flatter style brim; the edges are rolled up more than the Bull
Rider. The front portion of the brim is straight like the Bull
Rider, but is wider.
Reiner High Sides The brim edges are rolled up somewhere between the Cutter style and
the show crease.
Quarter Horse or Show Crease This hat shape has a pretty extreme roll and, quite honestly,
slightly resembles a hard-shell taco. The front part of the brim is
straight, making the sharpest angle into the roll.
Flat, or Buckaroo This brim is completely flat and doesn’t really look like it’s been
shaped at all. All hats start with a flat brim.
Rancher This hat has a moderate role but a curved brim in the front, instead
of the angular design seen in the Bull Rider, Reiner, and Quarter
Horse styles.
Rolled Similar to the Quarter Horse, this hat style features an extreme
roll but with a rounded front as opposed to a flat brim with sharp
angles into the roll.
Gus The brim closely resembles the Rancher.
Crown Shapes
Cattleman Crease The most traditional crease for cowboy hats, three creases run from
front to back.
Brick Crease This one literally looks like a brick could sit on top of the hat,
within the crease in the crown
The Dakota Similar to the Brick Crease, this crown style is pinched on four
corners to make a rectangular shape. It’s popular with bull riders.
Pinch Front This crown style is pinched in the front to create a “V” shape. It’s
a very popular style among a variety of hat types, including cowboy
hats.
Gus Similar to the Pinch Front, but with a higher crown that slopes down
towards the front of the hat.
Gambler This hat has a wide, flat brim paired with a flat crown.
Boss of the Plains This style is actually crease-less. Its rounded shape is also
referred to as “Open Crown.”
Montana Mix / Tom
Crease / Ten Gallon Similar to the Gus style, this hat is larger and more dramatic,
hence the “10-gallon” nickname.
There are certainly a lot of styles to consider when
selecting a hat!